Wofford said when she found valuables lying around, she’d tell her employers.

“I said, ‘I put it in the same place. You can go ahead and find it.'”

“If you’re honest. It’ll prove itself,” she said.

Like marsh, Wofford has been a longtime woman of faith. She believes God helped her to find good families to work for. And, she said, she loved raising the children.

She talk them how to walk and talk. In turn, the children would call her “Mama” and even preferred Wofford over their biological mothers.

“I’m blessed by the Lord,” she said.

Wofford said she left any notions of revenge to her Savior unlike, Minnie, who in “The Help” used her cooking skills to send a message, which is a message that stands today – that prejudice leaves a bad taste in everyone’s mouth.